Book Image

Mastering Qt 5

By : Guillaume Lazar, Robin Penea
Book Image

Mastering Qt 5

By: Guillaume Lazar, Robin Penea

Overview of this book

Qt 5.7 is an application development framework that provides a great user experience and develops full-capability applications with Qt Widgets, QML, and even Qt 3D. This book will address challenges in successfully developing cross-platform applications with the Qt framework. Cross-platform development needs a well-organized project. Using this book, you will have a better understanding of the Qt framework and the tools to resolve serious issues such as linking, debugging, and multithreading. Your journey will start with the new Qt 5 features. Then you will explore different platforms and learn to tame them. Every chapter along the way is a logical step that you must take to master Qt. The journey will end in an application that has been tested and is ready to be shipped.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Mastering Qt 5
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Logging custom objects to QDebug


When you are debugging complex objects, it is nice to output their current members' value to qDebug(). In other languages (such as Java), you may have encountered the toString() method or equivalent, which is very convenient.

Sure, you could add a function void toString() to each object you want to log in order to write code with the following syntax:

qDebug() << "Object content:" << myObject.toString() 

There must be a more natural way of doing this in C++. Moreover, Qt already provides this kind of feature:

QDate today = QDate::currentDate(); 
qDebug() << today; 
// Output: QDate("2016-10-03") 

To achieve this, we will rely on a C++ operator overload. This will look very similar to what we did with QDataStream operators in Chapter 10Need IPC? Get Your Minions to Work.

Consider a struct Person:

struct Person { 
    QString name; 
    int age; 
}; 

To add the ability to properly output to QDebug, you...